Mutley1150 said:
My 'experience' was that the bike was absolutely fine for it's intended purpose - posing and relatively low speed bimbling, maybe a bit of traffic light drag racing. So your experience was that the rest of the range are fine for high speed touring, scratching and / or off roading then?
I haven't ridden the entire range, but I was very impressed with the ones I did ride. I have no patience for "low speed bimbling" as you put it; I rode these every bit as fast as I used to ride my 1150GS on the same roads, cornering at roughly twice the posted speed limit and accelerating to about 100 mph in the straights. As for offroading, I suspect that with the propper tires, they would do just as well as my GS, considering its rather limited off road capabilities. Have a look at this thread for some examples:
http://www.advrider.com/forums/showthread.php?t=29723&highlight=webber
Quite why you persist in your attack on BMWs is beyond me. I have not held them up as some kind of ideal reliable motorcycle anywhere in my posts.
Calm down Mutley, its not an "attack". I posted the numbers because without them, you'd have no idea what percentage of the participants rode BMW's in proportion to the total.
This is still a meaningless statistic - if 20,000 bikes entered and only 10 broke down your figures would be correct but it would hardly be a damning indictment of the brand.
There were 117 entrants in total, of which 54 were BMW's.
In addition this is hardly a well researched survey as there is no previous knowledge of the age, mileage and mechanical well being of the bikes before they entered or the routes taken and mileage covered before breakdown.
Considering the amount of time, expense, and preparation that goes into an Iron Butt rally, I think we can safely conclude that the owners of the unfortunate BMW's were fully convinced they were up to the task of completing the race.
However you do actually make my point. Roughly 50% of the starting field were BMWs which shows the use that many buy them for.
What people
buy BMW's for is hardly a mystery. The question is how well the bikes they buy live up to those expectations. If I planned to enter an 11,000 mile race, I'd do it on a bike I could be reasonably sure would at least cross the finish line. For that reason alone I'd pick an FJR1300 or Honda Goldwing over any BMW.
If I buy a £14,000 motorcycle that produces 50 bhp from 1450 cc and it doesn't go, stop or go round corners quite as well as a bike costing a third of the price. If I then only use it to potter around at legal speeds then it had better, at least, be reliable!
£14,000?

My goodness, I hope that's not what they're actually charging for Harleys in the UK! The Sportster 1200 retails here for roughly $8,000, while the Superglide retails for $12,000. Compared to BMW's $16,000-20,000 price tags, that's a bargain.
